Thursday, April 19, 2012

This Blog Post Will Remain Untitled, Due to Lack of Creativity

A couple weekends ago, we ventured over to Taipei. 

Via railroad.
(Kendra is such a picture-taking doll.)

We shopped (the elusive Chambray Top was discovered and PURCHASED), we wandered, we bonded, we had picnics.

We had Indian food here, too:
Taipei 101: the island's own Eiffel Tower.

Except 101 has the added bonus of a food court in the basement, and high end brand name stores I can only lust after on the two floors above. 

Plus, the fact that the 101 was advertising Cartier kind of tickled me pink. (Guess what famous diamond brand has a headquarters just a few blocks away from here? That's right.)

This made me happy, too.


These girls are some of my favorites:
(I always want Kendra to take the pictures, because she has this totally legit camera--a big black one with the long lens thingy--that makes an awesome "clicking" noise when you push the button. It makes me want one, so I can carry it around while wearing a mustard cardigan, a striped scarf, and square glasses to make people think I'm a legit hipster.)

The next day, we had a picnic here:
 
Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall.
It's a memorial. For Chiang Kai-shek, a military leader of 20th century China. (That's all Wikipedia would tell me straight off of the Google page.)

It was Sunday, so there were quite a few other people there, as well.
 
"Kendra, Kendra! Lemme see the picture you just took, lemme see the picture you just took!"

It was fun being in Taipei; because it's kind of a famous city. You know, Taiwan's capital, and all. People tour there, and stuff. I live in Fengyuan, which--plenty of people remind me--is a rather small town. So, being white, we get looked at a lot in Fengyuan. Because there aren't many people touring in a small town. 
 But in Taipei, there are definitely more foreigners around. It's always fun to see a blonde head, or a tall old white guy, at the train station, or at the memorial hall where you had a picnic. My initial reaction when seeing a fellow white person is, "Oh, look, a foreigner! How cute, there's a group of them touring. Look at them, with their strollers and their cameras. Well, I'm no tourist. I live here. So there. I'm cooler." 
But I bet you can guess what they're thinking when they see me: "Hey cool! Another white person who decided to take a vacation to Taiwan! I wonder how long she's been here? Probably not very long. Well, I've been here a week already. So there. I'm cooler." 
Mostly it's funny, because human beings just think like that. 


But really. I'm cooler.







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